THE MICHIGAN DAILY E'f" T yTAT FATr n1 v 1D1A v u TErPlfDT Df cYtlJVnl yr lIE r1 c'l ci li J1tW I1 USSR To Start Highway Construction By THOMAS P. WHITNEY Associated Press Foreign News Analyst The vast Soviet Union is at long last becoming-slightly-highway y conscious. By American standards the Rus- sian road system lags a half-cen- tury behind the times. But the Kremlin has announced plans to construct by 1960 the beginnings of a paved road network for Euro- pean Russia. The construction, to be sure, will be on a minute scale compared with American highway construc- tion, particularly in light of the highway building boom under the federal government's new program for an interstate system of super- highways. Even if Soviet highway builders complete their assignment by 1960, Russia will at that time be farther behind the United States in high- ways than it is right now. Large Nation At present, Russia -- a country which is more than twice as large as the United States and occupies one-sixth of the world's land sur- face-has a total of about 125,000 miles of hard-surfaced roads. This is less than the length of the hard-surfaced rural roads in New York and Pennsylvania alone. The reason is plain: Whatever communism has accomplished, it has not provided a car for every comrade. The total Soviet production of motor vehicles in 1955 was 445,000. Only some 108,000 of these were passenger cars and only a small portion of these were sold to pri- vate car buyers. By 1960, Russian automobile production will amount to only about 650,000 units. Auto Production Small This compares with United States annual production which has gone to nine million vehicles in a prosperous year. T Russia's present road system and the Kremeln's road-building plans are outlined on the accompanying r map. The most important project on the Soviet drawing boards calls for reconstruction of the road from Moscow to Gorky on the Volga River, a distance of a little less than 300 miles. RheHeavily Travelled eSoviets say this road carries about 25,0001 cars a day, including both trucks and passenger vehicles. This probably makes it the most hevaily travelled road in the coun- try. The existing road is macadam and cobblestone. The new project will see it reconstructed, widened and modernized. Another new project wil link Belaya Tserkov, south of Kiev in the Ukraine, with Odessa on the Black Sea. This will complete a highway running all the way from Odessa in the south to Leningrad in the north. Prof. Kauper Re-Elected Prof. Paul Kauper, of the Law School, was re-elected chairman of the Ann Arbor city planning commission Tuesday. Prof. Kauper began serving his three-year commission term on July 1, 1956. He -served on the charter commission that develop- ed the new city charter. A new vice-chairman, Dean W. Coston, was named. '1 0 Mur Leningrad nitrovsk .; Moscow Gorky dl o Kandalaksha I swi 'w--7 *DP e tro z a vo d s k f o K a lu g a .od o s k K a s h ir a Leningrad Tallinn Novgorod Sverdlovsk * Petropavlovsk 'Riga KaliChelyabinsk Kaningradx MOSCOW Gorki Kazan Tf oi0Kochetav Vtebsk ~ .r ,. Troitsk 0,, MinskTobol Balkashino Smolensk ua" 3EmaK uybyshev ' Brest Kuznetsk *Orsk Kursk Saratov *Uralsk vKharkov. Sta ingrad ROMANIA Odessa Rotov Astrakhano P ERSON A L PLANNED PEARESTHOD CLINIC Advice by physician on birth control. Medical aid for couples wo want children but wh2o hav e been unabl:e to have them. Professional counsel on marriage problems. Physician. I nurse, family counselor in charge. Clinic hours, Tues., 7:30 P.M. to 9:0 . 122 N. Fourth Ave. Phone NO 2- 9282. _____ F9.8 HELP WANTED_ NURSERY SCHOOL teach rs wanted 3 mornings a week starting in fall. Nursery or Private School training ac- ceptable. Phone NO 3-6154 or NO 5- 6710. )H127 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES EXPERT FOREIGN and sports car service. Nye Motor Sales Inc., 514 E. Washington. NO 3-4858. )S28 You expect more from Standard And You get it. Best Deal in Town-Atlas Tires, Batteries, Accessories - Mechanic on Duty for Complete Automotive Servicing & Road Service. "Service is our Business" C-Ted Standard Service 1220 So. University at Forest Tel. ,7NO8-918 Open 7:30 A.M. to 10 P.M. Daily) ______ )26 FOR SALE WILL SELL to student only. 1953 35x8 Mobile Home. Low costs, privacy make it ideal for student couple. Exceptionally good condition. NO 3- 8275_for appointment. )B193 Jaguar XK120 Roadster, classic car in good condition. Call NO 3-5385 after 5 P.M. Mon.- Fri. and Saturdays. )B195 KIRBY VACUUM cleaner, model 518, with all attachmellts. Must sell,, will take any reasonable offer. Call NO 8- 9658. )B196 MEN'S short sleeve sport shirts $1.25. Skip-dents and seersuckers. Assorted Colors. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washing- ton. )B188 ROOM AND BOARD SINGLE ROOM, quiet, good for study- ing. Completely furnished and newly decorated. $10 per week, 502 E. Cath- erine, NO 2-8228. )E34 Room and/or Board Summer Rates Good food Good location Linen furnished 1319 Hill, Mr. Wentz, NO 2-6422 )E29 ROOMS FOR GIRLS. 119 Park Terrace. $6 for doubles, $7 for singles. Kitchen privileges. Call NO 2-101'i. )E33 LINES .1DAY 2 3 4 Classified .8 .96 1.12 3 DAYS 2°0 2.80 6 DAYS 2.96 3.55 4.14 Figure 5 average words to a line. deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 11:00 A.M. Saturday - Phone NO 2-3241 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES MISCELLANEOUS LEARN TO SWIM--students who are non-swimmers, private and semi-pri- vate lessons by qualiled Water Safety Instructor. Arrange your own time. Call Jacquie at NO 2-2521, Rm. 3403. )M27 HULA CLASSES, call NO 2-2386 after 2:30 P.M. )M26 NEW CARS 1958 VOLVO makes 48 States, Canada, Mexico non-stop run. See this car at Michigan European Cars, 303 S. Ash- ley. NO 5-5300. )2 PETS AND SUPPLIES Tropical Fish and supplies. UNIVERSITY AQUARIUM 328 East Liberty NO 3-0224 CT__ USED CA RS TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED to Raleigh, N.C., leave July 7th. Return July 15. NO 3- 1511, Ext. 252N. )t358 SUMMER STUDENT wishes ride to and from Detroit. NO 2-1965 or VE 6- 4127 . )G5? RADIOS, REPAIRS MUSICAL MDSE., HI Fl STUDIO An amazing inventory of Hi Ft components available to you at catalogue price, KITS We stock amplifier, AM-FM tuner, and speaker enclosure kits in sev- eral brands. HI F1 SERVICE Our engineers and technicians are fully competent and equipped to service all equipment we sell, and to advise you on the selection of components. 1217 & 1317 So. University NO 2-9595 )X73 MUSIC CENTER Just West of Hill Auditorium 300 S. Thayer NO 2-2500 24 Hour Service or Less on Most Repair Jobs FOR RENT WANTED-Girl to share campus apart- ment. Rent. $32.50. NO 2-8187, )C412 VERY LARGE, VERY NICE, VERY CHEAP. Room for man. Linens and cleaning. 204 N. State. NO 3-6983 af- ter 4 P.M. )C407 OPPOSIT'Eft. Joseph Hospital, 4 room apartment,stove and refrigerator furnishied, Phone NO-8-8044. )C409 PRIVATE BEACH-3 rooms and bath, Be comfortable this summer in this extra nice apartment on Whitmore Lake. Only 12 minutes fromcampus. Reasonable. By the week or month until Aug. 1. Call HI 9-9531 after 7 P.M. )C4061 SINGLE or Double Room-Two blocks from campus on quiet shady street, cross-ventitantion in each room. Also available for fall. Phone NO 3-4685. )C401 ONE BLOCK from campus -- newly decorated apartments. 514 So. Forest, NO 2-1443. )C404 BUSINESS SERVICES 1953 PONTIAC Radio, heater, good tires, very clean interior. For sale by owner. CALL NO 2-4736 I . ,, 0- '51 ENGLISH Austin, 4 dr., $4'6.l141y equipped, 27 mpg. Excellent condi- tion. H17 2-1509. )NIGI 1952 PONTIAC, 4-door, blue with hydramatic. A-1 condition, $295. 1953 CHEVROLET, 2-door, green. Looks and runs good. $445, 1955 CHEVROLET, 2-door, green. Excellent condition inside and out. $895. I AfA/4'RI/HWAYS BUILT r.n.14.MA/N'/G1WAYS UNDER ONSTRUC/ON . . . MAIN/GHWAYS TOBE BE/ILT FROM /958-/960 C 200 O0 -= iles 1956 CHEVROLET, 4-door, 6 cyl- I CAMPUS OPTICIANS 240 Nickels Arcade inder, standard transmission. Choice of two, both low-mile- age and really sharp. $1195, I' I - V---ft- I *Yerevan NO 2-9116 NO 8-6019 1957 CHEVROLET convertible. There is a choice of two, one red and the other blue. Both have radio, heater, power- glide, and the V-R engine, while one has power steering besides. $2195. M/+r W. I ..-...-.... .. Russia WU 1125, 000 MILES OF PAVED ROADS: ijntalSta~ ,3000. Russia TOTAL NUMBER OF MOTOR VEH ICLES (1955): United States Frames replaced while you wait, Stock lens replaced same day. Eyeglass prescriptions filled. )J173 TYPING-Thesis, term papers. Reason- able rates. Prompt services. NO 8-7590. )J167 LINOLEUM, wall tile, shades, venetian blinds installed properly. Murphy Brothers, 320 E. Liberty. NO 3-6725. ) J168 JIM WHITE, Inc. Cor, W. Huron and First Sts. inside Display Lot NO 3-3321 I, I F ' I PRODUCTION OF MOTOR VEHICLES (1955): We service radios, Hi-Fi automatic changers and record players, tape recorders. ) X72 - - - I J )N166 I Russia United States - r g~i sgik' EACX vEQUALS 2,600,000 VEHICLES Read Daily Classifieds I As part of the prog Moscow -Leningrad higI completed recently. Rus largest cities previously been connected by a which was completely with ease and comfort. The longest existing gram, the hway was ssia's two had not highway passable in the Soviet Union runs from Moscow to Simferopol in the Cri- mea. This is a distance of around 900 miles. This road is often used by vacationers driving south. A long branch from it leads to the reesorts in the Caucasus mountain Under construction, and sched- uled for completion before 1960, is a circular highway around Mos- cow. This road, the nearest thing to a superhighway in Russia, will enable cars to circle the city with- out entering it. JULY SPECIAL to introduce more women 1 highway I area. FORECASTS SLOW RECOVERY: Lewis Says Recession Real Danger to famous bras and I girdles I Congressional and Administra- tion policy makers "have their priorities upside down" n side- stepping tax cuts and other major anti-recession weapons for fear of future inflation, Prof. John P. Lewis of Indiana University re- marked here yesterday. The business forecaster said that Americans should pay less attention to the long-term threat of inflation and more to tie im- mediate problem of economic re- covery. He predicted that the economy will probably "totter along this summer, showing no clear signsI of an upturn until the fourth quarter. The recovery will be long- er and slower than the 1954-55 upturn, Prof. Lewis added. "I'm upset at policy makers who feel everything's okay once the economic indicators begin to turn. The criteria for judging the economy's health should not be minor changes in statistical in- dicators, but the over-all relatiop- ship between our productive capa- city and its uses. "Right now, our capacity is around $50 billion but output is only $420 billion. At the very least, this recession will cost us $60 bil- lion in goods and services we could have produced, but didn't. This is twice the amount lost during the 1954 recession," he said. The amount lost was about the equivalent of 10 years foreign aid or seven or eight years spending on higher education in this coun- try, he pointed out. Prof. Lewis said there were no signs of a quick and vigorous comeback on thekeconomic hori- zon. While inflation remains a long-term problem for the econo- my, he continued., conventional monetary and fiscal policies can stop this trend only at an "enor- mous cost" of unemployment and loss of production. Placing too great reliance on conventional anti-inflation wea- pons during a recession is "treat- ing our economic problem with the wrong remedy. . . one that's. worse than no treatment at all," Prof. Lewis said. FIRST QUALITY MERCHANDISE SAVE $105 on bras SAVE F $4 05 on girdles I I t z i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .r V .1 . w->( n '". y.;">: w<.e.wRm: ww x.:1\ TWO MOST POPULAR FORMFIT STYLES,.. Best-Selling Formfit bra, riMkA Ainr k_ - 1 The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m., the day preced- ing publication. THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 8-S General Notices All women students will have late permission until 12:00 midnight on Thurs., July 3. Open House: Basement Acoustics Lab, Frieze Bldg., Tues., July 8, 7:30 p.m. Lectures Dr. Stuart Finch will be consulting psychiatrist at the Fresh Air Camp staff clinic on Thurs., July 3, 8:00 p.m. Foreign Language Program: The first of a series of lectures and discussions, open to the public, will take place Thurs., July 3, 4:10 p.m., Rm. 3050, Frieze Bldg. Professors Ernst Pulgram and Robert Politzer will discuss the practical application of linguistics to the teaching of foreign languages. Conference for English Teachers: "Teaching A Poem." Bennett Weaver, Prof. of English. Harlan Hatcher, chair- man. Mon., July 7, 4:00 p.m., Aud. D, Angell Hall. Academic Notices Preliminary Examinations in English: Applicants for the Ph.D. in English who expect to take the preliminary ex- aminations this summer are requested to leave their names with Dr. Ogden, 1634 Haven Hall. The examinations will be given as follows: English Literature, 1550-1660, Tues., July 15; English and American Literature, 1660-1790, Satur- day, July 19; 1790-1870, Tues., July 22; an d1870-1950, Sat., July 26. The exam- inations will be given at the School of Bus. Admin. Bldg. in Rm. 258 from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 m. Placement Notices The following schools have listed teaching vacancies with the Bureau of Appointments for the 1958-59 school year. They will not be here to inter- view at this time. Algonac, Mich. - JHS Reading/Arith-1 metic/Social Studies (woman). Bakersfield, Calif. - Elementary; Ele- mentary Art; Homemaking; Woodshop; Music; English; Industrial Arts; Li- brarian; Mathematics Instrumental Music; Vocal Music; Girls Physical Edu- cation; Psychology; Science; 'Speech Correction; Visually Handicapped; Spe- cial Education. Barringtop, Ill. -- Boys' Counselor] Social Studies; Girls' Physical Educa- tion; English; Girls' Counselor. Hillsdale, Mich. - Art (Elementary/ JHS); Speech. Howe, Ind. (Howe Military School) - English/Coach Dramatics; Commercial (Includes Typing, Business Law, & General Math); 6-8th Social Science (also to assist in the JHS athletic pro- gram); 6-8th Science (also assist in the JHS athletic program.) Imperial, Calif. - Early Elementary; Later Elementary (Men whoare inter- ested in Physical Education); 7/8th Social Studies/Physical Education/ Coach Jr. Basketball. Lebanon, Ohio - Elementary; Girls Physical Education; Guidance Coun- selor. Milwaukee,, Wis. (Milwaukee Uni- versity School) - Administrative As- sistant (background in French or His- tory); HS French/German. Park Forest, Ill. (Rich Township HS) -English/Journalism; Head Librarian; Biology; Arts and Crafts; HS Special Education. For any additional information con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. Notice: The current summer job let- ters and communications seem to be missing from the Bureau of Appoint- ments, Summer Placement Office. If someone has taken them by mistake, will you please return them to Rm. 3528 Admin. Bldg. Personnel Requests: Stevens Personnel, Detroit, are look- ing for a girl to be secretary for a vice- president. Must be a college graduate and proficient in typing auid short- hand. Salary open. Chrysler Corporation, Detroit, Missile Division, has an opening for a Techni- cal Abstractor. The position is in the Reference Unit of the CCMD Library. Must be a graduate with a degree in journalism or English and a science minor or a degree in science with an interest or ability in writing. Experi- ence desired. Wayne State University, Detroit, have an opening for a girl to be an assist- ant counselor in Women's activities. Must haveeacademic training in coun- seling, and experience working in or with university woman': activity groups. She must be mature, enthusi- astic, interested, poised, attractive, well groomed, and preferably between 25-35. State of Michigan, Civil Service, an- nounces examinations for Engineering Draftsman, Highway E n g i n e e r i n g Draftsman, Highway Planning Engi- neers, and Building Trades Itinerant Teacher. VISIT OUR BARGAIN BASEMENT ROI 316 South State The GOLDEN APPLES restaurant... features for your enjoyment CHICKEN *STEAK. *SEAFOOD SMORGASBORD also BUFFET LUNCHEONS 11 A.M.-2 P.M. ALL YOU CAN EAT for $1.00 TO' "p'WE R HO0TE *Cot *SeIf " Wh (Reg .oLim Bes SKI * Lig "*Eas ( e (Regi " Um STO 1AP4CE P40 56O tton broadcloth -cle-stitched cups f-adjusting straps -ite. Sizes 32A-38C ular $2.00 each) 3 f95 it, 3 to a customer t-Selling Formfit girdle, PPI ES No. 843/943 jhtweight Nylon-elastic net sy elastic waistband ailable as pantie No. 843 or girdle No. 943 ular $7.50 each 2 for it, 2 to a customer CK IS LIMITED.. 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